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Expressions Question Stack
Expressions Question Stack
Expressions Question Stack
Expressions Question Stack
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Description

This self-checking activity can be used to practice or review Order of Operations, Combining Like Terms, Parts of an Expression and the Distributive Property.

How to play:

Begin with one question facing up.

All other cards should be answer side up spread out on the desk.

Students will find the answer, and flip it on top of the question (revealing their next problem) creating a stack of cards.

When they have answered all 20 questions, the final solution will be on the bottom of the stack.

Print on front to back on business cards or card stock. This is designed on the Avery 28371 Business Card template.

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Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

Expressions Question Stack

AlgebrawithMrsW
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$2.00

Highlights

Digital downloads
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Grades
6th - 12th
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Standards
Pages
4

Description

This self-checking activity can be used to practice or review Order of Operations, Combining Like Terms, Parts of an Expression and the Distributive Property.

How to play:

Begin with one question facing up.

All other cards should be answer side up spread out on the desk.

Students will find the answer, and flip it on top of the question (revealing their next problem) creating a stack of cards.

When they have answered all 20 questions, the final solution will be on the bottom of the stack.

Print on front to back on business cards or card stock. This is designed on the Avery 28371 Business Card template.

Report this resource to TPT
Reported resources will be reviewed by our team. Report this resource to let us know if this resource violates TPT's content guidelines.

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Standards

to see state-specific standards (only available in the US).
Identify parts of an expression using mathematical terms (sum, term, product, factor, quotient, coefficient); view one or more parts of an expression as a single entity. For example, describe the expression 2 (8 + 7) as a product of two factors; view (8 + 7) as both a single entity and a sum of two terms.
Apply the properties of operations to generate equivalent expressions. For example, apply the distributive property to the expression 3 (2 + 𝘹) to produce the equivalent expression 6 + 3𝘹; apply the distributive property to the expression 24𝘹 + 18𝘺 to produce the equivalent expression 6 (4𝘹 + 3𝘺); apply properties of operations to 𝘺 + 𝘺 + 𝘺 to produce the equivalent expression 3𝘺.
Apply properties of operations as strategies to add, subtract, factor, and expand linear expressions with rational coefficients.
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